Buch, Englisch, 312 Seiten
Selectivity and Limits to Enforcement
Buch, Englisch, 312 Seiten
Reihe: Series on International Taxation
ISBN: 978-94-035-0389-9
Verlag: Kluwer Law International
Fiscal State Aid Schemes
Selectivity and Limits to Enforcement
Sophia Piotrowski
Taxation is a core area of a State’s sovereignty and therefore highly sensitive to State aid control. This thoroughgoing study fully explains the architecture of EU State aid law as applied to fiscal aid schemes and elucidates the legal consequences of infringements in the context of State aid.
Focusing on the criterion of selective advantage under Article 107(1) TFEU and on the limits to recovery in the enforcement of State aid law, the author explores the current state of play after nearly 25 years of an ever more significant role of fiscal State aid law, emphasizing its ongoing uncertainties and potential modifications. The analysis relies on a case law approach that reveals the ways in which the objectives of State aid control are limited both by Member States’ fiscal sovereignty and by taxpayer rights. Issues and topics include the following:
- the role of the general principles of EU law as case-by-case limits to State aid enforcement;
- how the application of the selectivity test depends on the design of the tax measure in question;
- particularities of different types of taxes under State aid law;
- the role of the principle of protection of legitimate expectation in State aid law; and
- the structural problem that taxpayers are not in a position to notify aid to the Commission.
The author confronts the allegedly overly broad reading of material State aid law and the supposedly unjust consequences of infringements of State aid law, offering deeply informed recommendations and an outlook for future developments.
This comprehensive and well-structured exposition provides an in-depth understanding of the status quo of EU State aid law as applied to Member States’ tax measures. With extensive detail on the highly controversial legal consequence of recovery, it places the debate on fiscal State aid law in a broad context, exploring a wide range of taxes and tax measures and identifying an analytical framework underlying the case law of the CJEU. Professionals concerned with taxation in Europe – whether legal practitioners, jurists, policymakers, or academics – will have everything they need to understand the current dynamics.